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Palliative Care Research ; : 565-569, 2017.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-379448

ABSTRACT

<p>Backgrounds: Salivary dysphagia due to digestive tract obstruction from pharyngeal and cervical esophageal cancer is a major cause of drooling, and the retention of saliva in the mouth is annoying to patients. Case report: An 87-year-old woman with recurrent hypopharyngeal cancer after radiation therapy complained that she could not sleep at night because of continuous sputa accumulation, and that she had to repeatedly eliminate saliva throughout day. Intravenous betamethasone at dose of 8 mg per day provided symptom relief the day after its administration. Her score on the Support Team Assessment Schedule, Japanese version (STAS-J) for salivary dysphagia decreased from 4 before treatment to 1 within two days after the initial administration. The dose was decreased to 2 mg per day six days after the start of administration, but the symptom relief continued. No symptom recurrence was seen for the two months that steroids were administered. Discussion: Our STAS-J finding indicates that the anti-inflammatory effect of betamethasone produces a rapid response that is maintained for months in cases of stenosis due to malignancy. Conclusions: Treatment with high dose steroid has the possibility of the relief of suffering caused by difficulty swallowing saliva.</p>

2.
Palliative Care Research ; : 135-141, 2015.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-377102

ABSTRACT

Background: While the number of older cancer patients increases as the society ages, the current status of the pain control is not well characterized among older patients. To improve the quality of care, it is necessary to understand the current status. Objectives: The aim of this study was to describe the pain control for older cancer patients in comparison to younger counterparts and characterize it. Methods: During four months in 2013, Aomori Prefectural Central Hospital started asking all hospitalized cancer patients about their pain every day using a standardized pain questionnaire. In addition, a questionnaire adopted to the outpatient setting was distributed to the patients who visited outpatient department of the hospital. The information about pain, quality of life (QOL) and the medical histories were included in the data analyses. Their responses were compared between outpatients versus inpatients and older ( ≥65 years) versus younger (<65 years) patients. Results: The response rate was 57.0%. Pain management was less adequate among outpatients than among inpatients, with pain relief rate of 28.9% for the former and 52.6% for the latter (P<0.001). Among outpatients, the pain relief rate for the older patients was particularly low (older:24.7% vs younger:35.8%, P<0.01). Conclusion: Pain management for older patients in the outpatient settings needs a particular attention for improvement. Resources should be allocated to enable better detection and relief of pain among outpatients.

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